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With research staff from more than 60 countries, and offices across the globe, IFPRI provides research-based policy solutions to sustainably reduce poverty and end hunger and malnutrition in developing countries.

Erick Boy

Erick Boy

Erick Boy is the Chief Nutritionist in the HarvestPlus section of the Innovation Policy and Scaling Unit. As head of nutrition for the HarvestPlus Program since 2008, he has led research that has generated scientific evidence on biofortified staple crops as efficacious and effective interventions to help address iron, vitamin A, and zinc deficiency in sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, and South Asia.

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Since 1975, IFPRI’s research has been informing policies and development programs to improve food security, nutrition, and livelihoods around the world.

Where we work

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Where we work

IFPRI currently has more than 600 employees working in over 80 countries with a wide range of local, national, and international partners.

Sing is king: A nutty way to solve India’s protein problem (Times of India) 

March 04, 2023


Abhijit Banerjee* in an op-ed for the Times of India, asks, “Why then, if not for our primarily (but for the most part, not exclusively) vegetarian diet, is India the stunting and wasting capital of the world?” 

In further discussion of the issue, Banerjee mentions IFPRI research, writing, “the recent EAT-Lancet reference diet suggests that people should get 29 percent of their calories from proteins. While there is probably a margin of error, the recent estimate by a team at IFPRI in Delhi led by Manika Sharma that rural Indians get just 6 percent of their calories from proteins has to be worrying. Even the richest Indians in the NSS data get only about half of the recommended amount. The problem, to come back to where we started, is not meat — the Lancet recommended diet is mostly vegetarian — but other, more sustainable proteins.” 

 

* Abhijit Vinayak Banerjee is an Indian-American economist who shared the 2019 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences with Esther Duflo and Michael Kremer “for their experimental approach to alleviating global poverty”